NIOSH Home > Safety and Health Topics >Skin Exposures and Effects >Occupational & Environmental Exposures of Skin to Chemicals- 2005> Short Courses |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Short Courses Short Courses cover current accepted practices and are offered in four tracks simultaneously:
Percutaneous Penetration S1.1 - Experimental prediction of percutaneous penetration (Abstract), Faith Williams, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK S1.2 - In vivo studies for prediction of percutaneous penetration (Abstract), Eva Benfeldt, University of Copenhagen, Denmark S1.3 - Modelling percutaneous penetration (Abstract), Annette Bunge, Colorado School of Mines, USA
On-Site Applications S2.1 - Assessment of dermal exposure (Abstract), Derk Brouwer, TNO Chemistry, The Netherlands S2.2 - Preventing percutaneous penetration (Abstract), Anders Boman, Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Stockholm Centre for Public Health, Sweden S2.3 - Engineering controls for exposure reduction (Abstract), Chris Packham, Enviroderm Services, UK
Hazard Assessment S3.1 - Methods for assessing irritation, corrosivity and sensitization hazards from chemicals (Abstract), Klaus E. Andersen, Odense University Hospital, Denmark S3.2 - From experimental data to Material Safety Data Sheets and R-phrases (Abstract), Fritz Kalberlah, Research and Advisory Institute for Hazardous Substances, Germany S3.3 - Skin notation – past, present, future (Abstract), Heinz Ahlers, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, USA
Clinical Trends S4.1 - Clinical trends in diagnosis and treatment of skin disorders caused by occupational or environmental exposures – allergic skin disorders (Abstract), James S. Taylor, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, USA S4.2 - Clinical trends in diagnosis and treatment of skin disorders caused by occupational or environmental exposures – non-allergic skin disorders (Abstract), Howard Maibach, University of California at San Francisco, USA S4.3 - Clinical trends in diagnosis and treatment of systemic effects caused by occupational or environmental skin exposures (Abstract), Thomas Diepgen, Heidelberg University Hospital, Germany
|